A rising variety of US companies are holding off on main investments till they know the result of the upcoming presidential election.
Some 30% of corporations have postponed, scaled down or canceled funding plans due to uncertainty across the election, up from 28% final quarter, based on the most recent CFO Survey of economic professionals printed Wednesday by the Federal Reserve Banks of Atlanta and Richmond and Duke College’s Fuqua College of Enterprise.
“Relative to their non-impacted friends, impacted corporations are much less optimistic, are much less more likely to spend money on increasing or sustaining capability however extra more likely to spend money on value discount, and count on slower income and employment progress in 2024,” Atlanta Fed researchers Brent Meyer and Daniel Weitz wrote in a weblog submit.
The share of corporations taking a couple of step to hunker down forward of the election additionally rose to 11% from 6% within the second quarter, the survey that closed Sept. 6 discovered.
Corporations that count on to scale back funding are also bracing for decrease income and employment progress this 12 months in comparison with their friends, the survey confirmed. Whereas they see income and employment returning to ranges on par with non-impacted corporations in 2025, they don’t count on to catch as much as them. As a substitute, they count on to “completely lose” 1 to 2 share factors of progress this 12 months, the report confirmed.
The findings match anecdotal proof suggesting the election is retaining many corporations in limbo. The vote is being talked about in company earnings calls “earlier and extra abruptly” than it has been in earlier elections, based on an evaluation by Goldman Sachs.
Executives in virtually one in 5 earnings calls talked about “election” within the second quarter, the Wall Road financial institution discovered. That’s up greater than 5 share factors from the identical intervals in 2020 and 2016, based on Goldman.